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How has forking changed in the last 20 years?

Authors :
Shurui Zhou
Christian Kästner
Bogdan Vasilescu
Source :
ICSE (Companion Volume)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
ACM, 2020.

Abstract

The notion of forking has changed with the rise of distributed version control systems and social coding environments, like GitHub. Traditionally forking refers to splitting off an independent development branch (which we call hard forks); research on hard forks, conducted mostly in pre-GitHub days showed that hard forks were often seen critical as they may fragment a community. Today, in social coding environments, open-source developers are encouraged to fork a project in order to contribute to the community (which we call social forks), which may have also influenced perceptions and practices around hard forks. To revisit hard forks, we identify, study, and classify 15,306 hard forks on GitHub and interview 18 owners of hard forks or forked repositories. We find that, among others, hard forks often evolve out of social forks rather than being planned deliberately and that perception about hard forks have indeed changed dramatically, seeing them often as a positive non-competitive alternative to the original project.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE 42nd International Conference on Software Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....37ee172ec59105d379be45cd3644d50e